"Me too, kid."
Before Skater could touch his knuckles to the door's surface, it opened. He hadn't walked right in just in case the apartment had already been invaded by Lone Star and no one was watching the door. Surprising a lax sentry could have led to a gun battle that he definitely didn't want.
At the side of the door, Duran was already in position with the Scorpion out in the open.
"We're leaving," Archangel said as she came to the door. The lease is up on this place." She had her deck in its case and was dressed to go. "Anything we couldn't carry has been destroyed. Where's the car?"
Elvis stood behind her, a large suitcase in each hand. He eyed the street warily.
Skater called Wheeler over the link. "Let's go."
"On my way," the dwarf replied. Three blocks down, the van's headlights came on and carved tunnels in the shadows. The vehicle pulled smoothly out into the street.
Archangel obviously didn't feel comfortable standing in the doorway. She started toward the van at a sedate pace.
Skater fell into step beside her, feeling her tension and seeing it in the rigidity of her movements. "Problem?"
"You and Duran were made to this area by some street snitch," Archangel said. They broke it on the trid not long ago. You're still wanted in connection with Larisa's murder. Lone Star only started the house-to-house searches about forty-five minutes ago. Some of the crews got pulled once the action began at the restaurant." The van pulled up alongside them, and she took a seat beside Trey, who was conscious once again.
The seam on the mage's arm looked shiny and pink and new, like a sunburned strip. Skater didn't think it would scar at all.
"I take it the meeting didn't go well," Archangel said.
"No," Skater told her as he took a seat further back.
"McKenzie's not exactly thrilled with us at the moment." He explained about the switched credsticks. "I was figuring on cutting him out of the loop so we'd have only the elves to deal with. I'm sure they don't have their own base of operations here in Seattle yet. I thought maybe it would give us some breathing room with McKenzie out of the way. But it seems like McKenzie fed the elves some lies."
Duran took the passenger seat up front again while Elvis dumped the baggage into the back and shut the door. He had a hard time getting his bulk comfortable as he took a seat beside Skater.
“The yakuza showed up too," Trey said. "Unannounced. Which means someone tipped them off. Again. All in all, the whole little party was absolutely fascinating. It's hard to keep up with who might be double-crossing who at any given moment."
"Doyukai's people?" Elvis asked.
"Probably," Duran answered. "What with all the hell breaking loose, we didn't have time to check their bonafides."
"So you're thinking someone in Dragonfletcher's group sold him out to the yaks?" Elvis asked.
Wheeler had the van rolling steadily now, headed out of downtown. "Where to?" he asked.
"It could have been somebody from NuGene," Skater said to Elvis, then turned to Wheeler. "I'm open to suggestions."
"I've got a warehouse with the Fiat-Fokker juiced up and ready to fly."
"We took damage on the freighter raid."
"Yeah." The dwarf rigger nodded. "She may not be pretty, but she's navigable."
"How secure is this place?"
"I left the amphibian there," Wheeler pointed out. "We've got considerable investment wrapped up in that bird."
"Easy in, easy out?" Skater asked.
"It's wiz. Place is totally chill. I've had access for awhile, just never used it. One of those hidey-holes you keep like an ace up your sleeve."
"Let's do it."
"It's also possible that one of McKenzie's men sold out the meeting," Archangel said.
Skater nodded. "With the meet arranged the way it was. I'd say there are only three avenues for the information to get to the yakuza. McKenzie, NuGene, and us."
"Since us have nearly got our collective hoops shot off on different occasions during the last twenty-four hours," Trey said, "I vote we be left out of the running."
"No problem," Skater said. "The only other option is that Doyukai has someone planted in either McKenzie's or NuGene's camp."
"Doubtful," Duran said. "Those slags seem to play things pretty fraggin close to the vest."
"Then how did we get tipped to the cargo aboard the Sapphire Seahawk?” Skater retorted.
"True," the ork growled. "Me, it's jamming my hoop where the word came from. I'd like to get the scan before we go much further."
"McKenzie's a pretty involved man at this point," Archangel said.
Skater raised an inquiring eyebrow. "I don't have anything solid," she said, "but I was able to do some prowling around. From what I hear, McKenzie's trying hard to retire."
"You'd never know it," Trey said. "The slag I saw in action tonight was pure street savage."
"Where would he go?" Skater asked. "He's got millions stashed in dozens of accounts," Archangel said. "I don't have any solid figures or bank names or the aliases he might be using for the accounts. But I got enough to know he won't be deprived of anything he enjoys right now. Maybe he's been skimming from the biz he handles for the Family."
"Think he's about to get caught with his hand in the cookie jar and wants to get out before they take his head too?" Skater asked.
"The Mafia expects a little graft," Elvis said. "It's figured in. A slag who's good at what he does can afford to get greedy because he's keeping the Family coffers full."
"And McKenzie's been that kind of guy."
"Without question," Archangel stated. "But lately he's been investing in more legitimate enterprises."
"Have they been good investments or has he been losing his shirt?" Skater asked. "From the way he acted about the money tonight, he must be strapped."
Archangel shook her head. "It sounds to me like he's built up quite an impressive portfolio." She glanced at notes she'd scribbled. "He's not really making any profit, but he's leveraging money from different banks to buy interests in companies and businesses and stocks."
"Laundering his own money," Skater said.
Archangel nodded. "I think so, too, but it would be hard to prove."
"Then he's dealing with considerable shrinkage working through the money scammers," Wheeler said. The lights of the sprawl washed over the van's windshield, a neon jungle war waged in advertising. "Joker taking financial hits like that, this biz with NuGene could sound pretty good."
"He came up out of the gutter, kid," Duran said. 'Tonight you kicked dirt in his face. No matter what social ladder he might be trying to climb, he's not just going to turn the other cheek."
Trey smiled wanly. "I get the feeling McKenzie works out of the other testament."
"How accessible is the info on McKenzie?" Skater asked Archangel.
'To who?" she asked.
"The yabos working for him."
She appeared to consider that, then nodded. "The ones that are well connected could probably find out.”
"Makes you wonder if any of them has designs on the hole McKenzie would leave behind," Skater said, "They said nature abhors a vacuum. One of them could have cut a deal with the yakuza and sold McKenzie out."
"I also traced the nuyen that paid Larisa Hartsinger's bills for the last few months," Archangel said. "It took quite a bit of doing."